Paul
T. Mero
Homeschool Dad, President of Sutherland Institute
"Homeschooling
and Freedom"
As
President of the Sutherland Institute, Paul has been
instrumental in influencing public policy and in legislative
issues. He and his wife, Sally, have six children and two
grandchildren. Paul
expanded our vision and we saw that our homeschooling efforts
bless the entire community. You can read his articles on
education at -more-
Joyce
Kinmont
homeschool
mom,
Founder of LDS-HEA,
author of Home
School Decisions and Diet Decisions
"Why Latter-day Saints Should Home School"
The
Kinmont's
were one of the first families to homeschool in the state of
Utah. Eight wonderful children and a lovely foster
daughter were all homeschooled. "We delight in the people
our children have grown to be, the spouses they've chosen, and the
25 creative, talented
grandchildren they have given us so far." From
the perspective of over 30 years, Joyce shared reasons
why Latter-day Saints should homeschool.
Coke
Newell
Homeschool
Dad, Author
"The
Edaphic Leadership Compass"
Having
embarked on "the Great Experiment" in 1982, Coke and
his wife, Cindy, have homeschooled their seven children
since each was born. The four oldest are enrolled in
regional colleges, studying film, computer science, aeronautics
and "undeclared." Coke is a widely published
author and has worked in journalism and public relations
for most of twenty years. He
has developed an inspired model for leadership based on the
points of the compass, a visual so simple
you can hang a 4x4” drawing or two on your refrigerator door
or your dashboard and stay constantly reminded of the
principles. His
website is www.edaphica.com.
Celestia
Shumway
Homeschool
Mom
"The Tree of Life: A Model for Mothers"
What does
it mean to nurture? Do we as mothers take this stewardship
seriously? How do mothers nurture children at different
ages and stages? Why have the prophets always encouraged mothers
to be in their homes with their children? The tree of life
metaphor in the Book of Mormon gives us the
secrets. Celestia has developed a fascinating concept
called "Tree of Life Mothering" which unifies the
principles of attachment mothering, leadership education, and
natural, holistic, Christ-centered family living.
Celestia has a degree in zoology, premed emphasis, from BYU. She
decided to forego medical school to focus on mothering. She has
six children ages 0 to 12, has homeschooled from the beginning,
is wife to her wonderful attorney husband Dan, and has been a
volunteer breastfeeding counselor for over 8 years.
Rebecca
Rocque
Homeschool
Mom, Teacher
"Indigo Children - The Children of Light:
How
Do We Teach Them?"
Experts
in the field of psychology, education, physics, and religion
believe that 96% of the children under the age of 10 are
"indigos." These
children/teens have numerous gifts, talents and abilities and
are extremely intelligent and creative, but the sin and
corruption of this world, and the hypocrisy of the Saints, is
very painful to their souls. For them the veil is
thin. It's hard for them to live in this world, and many
are being destroyed. If we learn how to teach these
last-days children without injuring them, they in turn will help
us, and hearts and homes will be healed and our lives blessed in
unimaginable ways.
Rebecca
has been a professional teacher
(preschool through college and adults) on a variety of subjects,
including indigo children and emotional health education, for
the almost 30 years. She has taught Technology in Education classes at UVSC and Educational
Psychology at UVSC and BYU.
-more-
LuJean
Livingston
homeschool
mom,
author of One Sure Foundation
curriculum materials
"Creating a Spiritual Environment of Learning in
Our Homes"
LuJean
taught us about the home as a temple and the gospel as the
foundation of all learning.
-more-
Michele
Brady Stone
Homeschool Mom
"The
Celestial Model of Education"
What
an exciting time to be raising and educating children!
The trust which God has put in the mothers and fathers
of this chosen generation growing up in these last
moments of the last days is incredible, and He is
depending on them to live up to it. Today's children
must be educated in a way that will prepare and qualify
them to accomplish the magnificent missions which God
has entrusted to them. It is up to their parents
and teachers to first overcome the "telestial
education" which most of them experienced, and then
go beyond "terrestrial education" to begin to
discover and implement the principles of "celestial
education" for themselves and their families. As
parents strive to do this they will be raising up a
generation more capable of living Celestial laws, and
more prepared to welcome the Savior when He returns.
That is the true and eternal purpose of education.
Reading, writing, arithmetic, etc. all play an important
role in education, but they can be introduced and taught
according to telestial, terrestrial, or celestial
principles and purposes. What children learn is not as
important and why, how, and when they learn it.
Michelle and her husband Shane live in Draper, Utah with
their six wonderful (most of the time)
children. She makes it part of her mission to
spread the word about Celestial Education, "We need
a generation of children who are being prepared for a
Celestial world rather than just for the telestial one.
We don't want our children to grow up to be telestial
people, so why do we educate them telestially?"
Jack
Monnett
homeschool
dad, Institute teacher,
publisher, author,
Revealed Educational Principles
& THE Public Schools
"Beyond
Textbooks: Curriculum for a
Millennial Generation"
The
Lord had explained that learning and academic achievement are
good--but he has qualified their importance as secondary to
spiritual growth. The scriptures have outlined specific
areas which should be taught in our homes and the consequences
for not teaching them. (Liberty, responsibility, watchful
for Satan's counterfeits, leadership, complete trust in Lord and
skepticism for the "arm of flesh," etc.)
If
you haven't yet read Jack's book, Revealed Educational
Principles and the Public Schools, may we suggest you do so
now. It will give you a solid foundation upon which to
build your homeschool testimony. The book is a
history of education in early Utah. In those early
schools,
scriptures were read and church leaders wrote many of the books
the children used. They were narratives, not textbooks,
and they were intended to develop faith. Then the
Saints drifted into worldliness and wanted teachers with
credentials and secular curriculum. When "free"
schools came along, the Saints were outright disobedient to the
counsel of their leaders. There is much to learn from this
book, and much to think about.
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